Archive for the ‘bar’ Category

Whiskey Cocktails

Tuesday, February 5th, 2008

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Ruby Manhattan

Ingredients:
- 2 oz Michter’s Rye Whiskey
- 1 1/2 oz Ruby Port
- dash of Reagan’s Orange Bitters
- Orange twist
- Maraschino cherry

Dash orange bitters into a chilled cocktail glass, Squeeze and treat with orange twist. Build ingredients in a cocktail shaker over ice. Stir 20 seconds and strain into a cocktail glass. Garnish with maraschino cherry and orange twist. (Cocktail created by Michael Waterhouse, Devin Tavern, 363 Greenwich St, New York NY 10013)

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Misty Winter Warmer

Ingredients:
(makes four quarts)
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1 1/2 tsp whole cloves
- 4 cinnamon sticks
- 2 qt cranberry juice
- 46 oz pineapple juice
- 2 cups Canadian Mist whisky
- 4 1/2 cup water

Place brown sugar and spices in a pot basket of a 30-cup coffee maker. Add juices, water and whisky to the pot. Brew as you would coffee and serve hot, directly from the pot.

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Sazerac
Ingredients:
- 2 oz Straight Rye Whiskey
- Dashes of bitters
- 1/4 oz Pernod
- 1 tbsp Simple Syrup (or 1 sugar cube)
- Garnish: Lemon peel

Shake all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice and strain into an old-fashioned glass. Garnish with a lemon peel.

Modern Sazerac
Ingredients:
- 2 oz Sazerac Rye whiskey
- dash Peychaud’s bitters
- 1/2 oz agave syrup
- dash Ricard
Garnish: lemon twist

Fill rocks glass with crushed ice and add a dash of Ricard. In mixing glass, swirl rye whiskey, bitters and agave nectar until they dissolve. Add ice, discard Ricard and crushed ice. Strain into rocks glass. Garnish with a lemon twist. (Cocktail created by Eben Klemm, B.R. Guest Mixologist/Primehouse New York)

History:
In the late 18th century, a pharmacist, Antoine Amedee Peychaud invented this cocktail in New Orleans’ famous French Quarter where he owned his shop. The original cocktail was a concoction of brandy, absinthe and bitters. Some historians say the term ‘cocktail’ came from a tiny French egg-cup called “coquetier” that was used to serve Sazerac cocktail.

Its Cold…Drink Brandy

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

So Ill be short and sweet today…no matter where you live in the US right now, its probably cold outside…so here are some Brandy cocktail recipes, cuz you know, where else do you drink Brandy but by the fire…here you go…enjoy

Cocktail
American Beauty

Ingredients:
- 1 oz Brandy
- 1 oz Orange Juice
- 1/2 oz Dry Vermouth
- 1/4 tsp Creme de Menthe (white)
- 1 tsp Grenadine
- 1/2 oz Tawny Port
- Glassware: Cocktail Glass

Mix all ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice. Strain into a chilled martini glass.

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Cocktail
Tulip
Ingredients:
- 1 oz Apricot Brandy
- 1/2 oz Apple Brandy
- 1/2 oz Lemon Juice
- 1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth
- Glassware : Cocktail Glass

Mix all ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.

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Pomegranate Toddy

Ingredients:
- 3 oz brandy
- 1 1/2 oz Pama pomegranate liqueur
(or substitute with 2 oz pomegranate juice and 1/4 oz simple syrup)
- 3 oz Darjeeling tea with cloven
Garnish: cinnamon stick and orange peel

Brew tea first. In an Irish coffee mug, pour brandy and pomegranate liqueur. Pour hot tea and stir. Garnish with cinnamon stick and orange peel.

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Cocktail
Harvard Cocktail

Ingredients:
- 2 oz Brandy
- 1 oz Sweet Vermouth
- 1 oz Lemon Juice
- 1 tsp Grenadine
- 1 dash Bitters
- Glassware : Cocktail Glass

Mix all ingredients in a cocktail shaker with ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.

NightLife

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

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As the sun goes down and local shops and groceries stores begin to close there doors and the flicker of lights from houses begin to diminish as all the children are tucked into bed…this is when the night life begins. Stale yellow lights from lamp post soon begin to be replaced by an array of bright buzzing neon rainbows flashing signs for cocktails and beer, live nudes and the ‘party scene’.

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Men and women alike get donned up in their best (or not so best) attire and hit the streets all across this beautiful brazen county of ours, all in search of the same thing…that spot with the best Night Life.
As Americans we love the night time party scene…Dim dance clubs blasting the latest and greatest chart toppers while all sorts of multi colored lights flash and spin as smoke begins to bellow from beneath the DJ booth
Ahh yes, we have all been there…shoulder to shoulder with complete strangers trying against all odds not to spill your drink down the bare back of the nice lady dancing in front of you as you simultaneously attempt to scan the crowd in hopes of locating your friend who you last saw scampering off with a random stranger of the opposite sex. As we all know, most of these nights are hit or miss…either they are great…or you end up wishing you would have stayed home doing something more fun and constructive…such as lying on the couch and catching up on your favorite TV shows…A prospect which keeps some people from ever stepping foot outside their house in attempts to go to the club…
But wait…all you people out there who are disgusted by the idea of paying for over priced drinks in an over crowded bar to get your taste of the night life…I have a solution for you…bring the party to the place you know best…your home…now I know the initial idea of taking a club and plopping it down smack dab in the middle of your living room my not conjure the best of mental images…but give me a chance to explain…
Imagine this…you have your house set up with dim lights…neon signs posted on the walls…stylish light up glasses and straws line your make shift bar…all to accommodate only those people who YOU decide are fit to party in your humble abode.
If the picture just painted brings a smile to your face…you have come to the right place…
Lets start from the top…

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You are going to want to make the general ambiance of your home as bar like as you can…and what better way to do it then with neon lights??Here at After5Catalog we have got you covered on just about ANY type of crazy neons you can think of…Everyone loves Beerpong…but can you find a bar anywhere with a beer pong table?? Well you can now…right at YOUR bar!! Martinis and cocktails…like I said, if you want a neon sign…we got it!

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So now that we have the neons taken care of…what kinda classy bar would you have without some really kick ass cocktail glasses?? Dim the lights down low and let theses sets of light up “drinking untensils” make the mood nice and mellow…

Last but not least…if want to go full bore and really deck your place out…try one of our personalized signs…we have a PLETHORA of customizable signs to fit just about anyones needs….

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So the next time you are out with the guys or gals and someone spills a drink down your back…just remember…we here at after5…”have got your back”

 

 

 

 

Whiskey, Bourbon, and Scotch…The Lowdown on the Dark Cocktails

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

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There comes a time in one’s life when it’s no longer cool to mindlessly shout, “a shot of whiskey” when bellying up to the bar. You do know there are distinctly different types of whiskey don’t you? Well in case you missed it in Mixology 101 either in the School of Hard Knocks or sometime in college, you’re in luck. I’m going to distill whiskey down to its core elements. Listen up because there will be a test at the end.

Whisky loosely defines a panalopy of alcoholic beverages distilled from any combination of fermented or malted barley, rye, malted rye, wheat, or corn that is aged in oak casks. The word “Whisky” originates from the Gaelic word “water” and the first written record of its creation dates back to 1405 in Ireland. Scotch and Bourbon are the two biggies dwarfing (Please click this link..) all other whiskey varieties.

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The two basic types of Scotch are Malt and Grain. Malt is whisky made entirely from malted barley. Grain is whiskey made from malted and unmalted barley along with other grains. 3 different varieties of Scotch result:

• Single malt whisky is produced by a single distillery. Unless the whisky is described as “single-cask”, it will contain the same type of malt yet from many casks. This allows it to achieve a taste representing a particular distillery’s brand such as Glenfiddich, Bowmore, or Glenlivet.

• Vatted malt is created by combining malt whiskies produced by different distilleries. It is usually labelled as “pure malt” or “malt”. A top brand in this category is Johnnie Walker Green

• Blended whiskies, usually cheaper and made from a mixture of Malt and Grain from many distilleries, are blended to produce a flavor consistent with a brand that’s independent of a particular distillery such as Ballantine’s or Chivas.
Usually Scotch is distilled twice, though sometimes a third time. International laws require anything bearing the label “Scotch” to either be distilled in Scotland and matured for a minimum of three years in oak casks or distilled elsewhere meeting the same standards. Whiskies mature only in the cask and not the bottle, so a Scotch’s age is measured between the time it is distilled and bottled. This indicates how much the cask has interacted with the whisky, altering its body and taste. Whiskies that have been in the bottle for many years may be considered rare but are not older and will not necessarily be better than a more recently made whisky matured in wood for a similar time. If Scotch whisky is from more than one cask, and if it includes an age statement on the bottle, it must reflect the age of the youngest whisky in the blend. As a result, many single malts omit the age because they use younger elements in small amounts for flavoring and mellowing.

Bourbon
By international agreement, a whiskey qualifies as Bourbon if it is made in the United States, contains at least 51% and no more than 79% Indian corn, distilled at no more than 160 proof, and aged in an oak cask charred on the inside. Distillers typically use American White Oak casks because they are porous enough to enhance aging yet not too much allowing leakage. Most bourbon is aged four years or more with higher-end brands topping six years or longer. Nothing can be added during bottling to enhance flavor, sweetness, or alter color so this rules out Jack Daniels and Southern Comfort. Other grains included with the Bourbon making process are malted barley, rye, or wheat.
Bourbon whiskey was first made in the central bluegrass region of Bourbon County, Kentucky. The county received its namesake in honor the French royal family. In 1774 at Fort Harrod (now Harrodsburg) Kentucky, residents had an abundance of corn exceeding what they and their livestock could eat. They began converting the excess into whiskey because it didn’t spoil and could be transported more easily than the grain itself. As the distilled spirits were shipped in barrels down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans, they were stamped with the county’s name, eventually becoming synonymous with this kind of whiskey. Later on, an important refinement known as the sour mash process was pioneered by Dr. James C. Crow at the Old Oscar Pepper Distillery (now the Woodford Reserve Distillery) in Woodford County, Kentucky. Each new fermentation is conditioned with some amount of spent mash (previously fermented mash that has been separated from its alcohol). The acid introduced by using the sour mash controls the growth of bacteria that taints whiskey and creates a proper pH balance for the yeast to work. Popular brands include Maker’s Mark, Wild Turkey, and Jim Beam.

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So now for the test. Try some different shots of Scotch described above and some of the recipes below. Savor the distinctions you have just learned between Bourbon and Scotch. Then next time you’re out painting the town red, ask specifically for the type of whiskey and/or cocktail you prefer.

Check out these awesome products from After5 along with some cocktail ideas to go along with all your newfound knowledge.

whiskey-decanter
whiskey-decanter

These are our new Crystal Decanters, GREAT for Whiskey, Bourbon or Scotch…or hell all three!

Rusty Nail

Fill a rocks glass with ice

1 1/2 oz. Scotch
1/2 oz. Drambuie
Always pour the Drambuie last to allow it to mix with the lighter Scotch
Combine ingredients in a mixing glass and strain into glass

Black Dragon

1 part mint schnapps
1 part Kahlua coffee liqueur
1 part Glenfiddich Scotch whisky

In shot glass, first add the mint schnapps, then add Kahlua and finally add the scotch. If done correctly you should have three different layers

shotglass-checkers
shotglass-checkers

Shot Glass Checkers…a good way to get REALLY… ummm, well lets just say you might not want to play this one if you are trying t improve your gaming skills….

Dixie Dew

2 oz Bourbon
1/2 tsp Triple Sec
1/2 tsp Creme de Menthe (white)

Shake all the ingredients with ice and strain into cocktail glass

Midnight Cowboy

2 oz Bourbon
1 oz dark rum
1/2 oz heavy cream

Shake with ice and strain into cocktail glass or serve on the rocks

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Now these are just awesome…maybe its just cuz I’m from Michigan but either way, these are AWESOME!

Mint Julep

4 oz Bourbon
1 dozen fresh Mint Leaves
1 White Sugar cube or 1 teaspoon Granulated Sugar

Muddle the mint and sugar together with a dash of bourbon in a silver julep mug (a rocks glass or highball glass will suffice). Fill glass with ice, add more bourbon and stir Garnish with a mint sprig and serve with a straw

And last but not least…just in case you want to spread your new knowledge…keep it in your pocket for that perfect opportunity. flask.jpg

Drink Dispensers for the Golfer

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

golfer-drinking.jpgWhat is it about golf that makes a beer taste so good. When I play golf I have to have a beer/ booze plan before I go. In fact I can almost be certain that my game will be better if beer is on the links with me. With this in mind when the Golf Shoe Bag Covert Cooler was presented to us it was a slam dunk for our After 5 catalog. You’ve got your irons and your woods. Now toss in the aluminums. The Shoe Bag Covert Cooler provides a discreet, soft-sided, and completely watertight compartment for hiding and cooling your frosties while out on the links. The clearly labeled “Shoe Bag” (wink, wink) fits inside your golf bag’s large side pocket and, like you, holds up to 9 cans of beer or your favorite beverage at a time. . A very cool and popular item. I never leave home (on the way to thegolf-shoe-bag.jpg links), without it.

But an even more popular golfers drinking toy is the Designated Driver Cooler Club. This is my favorite club in my golf bag. Its a stealthy drink dispenser that’s shaped just like one of your drivers and fits into the golf bag along with the rest of the clubs. The head of the Designated Driver Kooler Klub looks just like a real club! The double walled shaft of the club champ fits easily into your golf bag and holds 48 ounces of cold or hot beverages (enough to satisfy a thirsty foursome). A thumb activated keg-like pump mechanism on the cooler club dispenses the juice from the insulated drink caddy out the top and into you glass. The only down side to this handy drink dispenser / cooler is you cant drive a ball with it. If you can believe it we have had some returned from golfers that have tried. In any event both of drink dispensers for the links help me with my golf game. The relaxing mind numbing qualities of of a good drink will undoubtedly improve any hackers game, or maybe its that we care less about the game when using these drink dispensing golfers toys.

“Fore!”

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Chiller Cocktails; Shot Glasses Made of Ice

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

ice-shots.jpgNowhere is it said that you must use glass or plastic as the vehicle from which to sip your cocktail. How about ice. Yes solid molded or hand carved ice in the shape of a cocktail glass.. In Sweden there is a place called the Ice Hotel where they have an ice cocktail lounge. Here the bartender serves your drinks in a chunk of ice carved out in the shape of a cocktail glass. Now the thought of putting an ice cocktail glass to your lips might make a lowlander cringe. I have made reference to this concern in past blogs, but I can’t ignore that dreaded childhood nightmare of licking and sticking your tongue to a metal pole outside in the winter. No, that doesn’t happen here. Your body heat melts the ice glass preventing your lips from freezing while you enjoy your chilled cocktail of choice. On the pole the metal freezes the moisture on your tongue making the pole lock to your face. I only make reference to the ice pole to dispel any rumors associating pain with creativeice-glasses.jpg cocktailing. Iced cocktail and shot glasses are totally cool, (excuse the pun) and are a great way to enjoy a cocktail. The ones that I have are Arctic Frozen Ice Shots. They are great substitute if you can’t break away and fly to Sweden for the real icer. You just fill them up with water throw them in the freezer for a day and you got frozen shot glasses. In the standard home bar @ 70 degrees you get about three drinks per shot glass before you run into leakage. That’s why you get 20 shot glass molds per pack. These shot glasses work geat for martinis as a side note…just had to get that in for those martini lovers. If you put your vodka or gin in the freezer you get much better mileage out of your ice shot glasses than room temperature liquor. Note; your mileage may vary depending on freezer settings.

Words by Eric States

Good Libations

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

By Leslie Dinaberg

top_strawberry_margarita.jpgIt was the headline I’ve been fantasizing about for all of my adult life: “Study Finds Fruity Cocktails Count as Health Food.” I double-checked the URL, just to make sure I hadn’t accidentally stumbled onto the Onion.

Sure enough, Reuters was actually reporting that, “a fruity cocktail may not only be fun to drink but may count as health food, U.S. and Thai researchers said on Thursday.” It makes so much sense. I knew I hadn’t been irresponsibly drowning my sorrows in alcohol for the past couple of decades. Those massive quantities of strawberry margaritas consumed over the years really did make me feel better—even in the morning. I love it when science finally comes around to my way of thinking. The discovery was pure serendipity—like the discovery of penicillin. Tucked away in their labs (no doubt downing Red Bull, Mountain Dew, and Jolt cocktails) Dr. Korakot Chanjirakul and colleagues at Kasetsart University in Thailand and scientists at the U.S. Department of Agriculture were exploring ways to help keep strawberries fresh during storage, and accidentally stumbled on evidence that treating the berries with alcohol increased their antioxidant capacity and free radical scavenging activity. In English, this means that adding ethanol—the type of alcohol found in rum, vodka, tequila and others—boosted the antioxidant nutrients in strawberries and blackberries.

The next time someone gives you a hard time for chugging a pitcher of Tangerine Banana Mango Daiquiris, you get right on your high horse and tell them you’re just conscientiously doing your part to prevent cancer. Does that rock or what? You can now imbibe with pride. This means that all those times we brought Margaritas to the Little League games we weren’t senior delinquents. No. We were good Samaritans saving lives. The report in the Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture says that any colored fruit might be made even more healthful with the addition of a splash of alcohol. How awesome is that? Look around at the Farmer’s Market. All fruits are colored! Get this: for those of you that like celery with your Bloody Marys (blech!) or onions with your Martinimargarator.jpgs (gag!), the antioxidant effect works withmargarator.jpg vegetables too. As we all know by now, people who eat more fruits and vegetables have a documented lower risk of cancer, heart disease and some neurological diseases. Add that to a little Leslie logic and you’ve got a double whammy on the rocks: (a) Fruity frilly drinks are whimsical; (b) Scientists like fruity frilly drinks; (c) I like fruity frilly drinks; (d) Therefore, I’m a whimsical scientist. I’m hoping the next phase of research will prove that adding little cocktail umbrella enhances the antioxidant effect.

Martini Chillers; The Stemless Cocktail Glass

Monday, July 30th, 2007

square-martini-chiller.jpgMartini chillers might be a mystery to some but there is a very valid reason for their existence. Back in retro days the martini/cocktail glass was, (and still is) an bar ware icon. Up until someone in a drunken spell busted the stem off one and fell in the snow….didn’t even spill the martini..a new bar glass was born. The Martini Chiller. The idea is to surround the sides of the stemless cocktail glass with ice to keep the alcohol from getting warm. Well you can’t do that with a stem on the glass. Remove the stem and put what’s left in a bowl of ice. I wish I had thought of this. its a great way to warden off those alcohol warming blues and keep your drink cold and fresh for its brief but sweet libatious duration at cocktail hour. I was skeptical at first, I mean after a couple of my martinis I need that stem for support, or shal we say a handle. How do you hold on to a tapered wet conically shaped cocktail glass? It takes practice and its worth it. It actually ads to the ritual and savoring nature requisite of a good martini. Concentration with each sip. Honestly, I only use my martini chiller on special occasions- new vodka, old vodka, warm vodka, only after five. Its a great conversation piece and it does work well.mr-freeze-cocktail-chiller.jpg

In fact I took it quite a bit further… There was a time when I was obsessed with making cool, new, hard to make drinking gadgets, in fact I am still fairly well entrenched in that frame of mind. My wife says I am a little obsessed with my creativity. I feel its its a calling. Home bars need cool stuff. I like to find it, or make it and share it. Hence After 5. One of the more outlandish of our inventions is what I like to call the Terminator of cocktail chillers… better known in the catalog as Mr Freeze.

The idea here is to fill the milled aluminum reservoir with water, freeze overnight, make your cocktail the next day and park it in the cradle. This is the ultimate of chillers in my biased opinion. The frozen aluminum has crazy conductive properties. When you put the metal glass in it you can see the ice build like a Chicago snowstorm. Your drink can’t get warm. Nor does the next one, or the next…if you get that far. Quite a party flair as well. The casinos buy these and use them for their shrimp cocktail serving dishes. Clever huh?

In summery the cocktail chiller is a special bar tool that every true cocktail aficionado worth their salted rim shouldn’t be without. Its not for everyday, its a little more involved than just grabbing a glass and pouring but its worth the added effort. Even the bad vodka tastes better in a chiller.

Cheers,

Words by Eric States.

“It’s After Five Somewhere”

Friday, July 13th, 2007

I’m out of wine my wife said. Yes she drank My wine that I grew to appreciate while finishing my laptop movie, Stranger than Fiction with Will Ferrell, again at 35,000 feetmai-tai-pic.jpg returning from the yearly family vacation. But the story is not over. Ya see my first alcoholic confrontation on this trip, and only one I might add, was with this cute bubbly blond at the salt water pool. She was in charge of snorkeling gear and kayak rentals at the hotel we were saying at… I offered my Mai tai for the use of a kayak for an hour. A truly generous offer I might add and he said “No thanks and I really can’t understand how people can have a cocktail this early in the morning.” Stunned while checking my watch out of some knee jerking guilt, sensed a challenge or at least the need to educate this young dough head, responded with,

Hey, its after five somewhere”. I don’t think she go it. No sense of humor. A true blond. I searched for another justifying response to her demoralizing buzz kill but it was no use. This chick doesn’t get it. I don’t think booze has ever hit her brain. The closest she has gotten to alcohol is on a cotton swab at the doctor’s office. No worries hey she’s got a lot of drinking years ahead of her, she’ll get a chance sooner or later. I drank my Mai tai and dove in the pool. No kayak but happy none the less.

Is it an unwritten rule with travelers that time and cocktails have no relationship? Or maybe it’s just the word vacation that turns off the responsibility meter? Possibly the pent up do- goodedness that we all harbor while in work mode for weeks and months on end in anticipation of the time off. Well vacation is over for me, Iafter-5-sign-2-copy.jpg have gained 18 pounds from the daily breakfast buffet and all the Mai Tai’s, I feel like King Kong, and I cant even see my …..toes anymore. Diet time. Cut the carbs and break out the vodka. No more fruity chick drinks. I will miss’em. Aloha Hawaii, see ya next year.

Sad words by Eric States

Beer; The Margarita Mascot

Friday, June 8th, 2007

Beer_glasses
Beer_glasses

Beer…. that back bone of the bar. It can’t be called a cocktail so it doesn’t count as a cocktail when you’re gathering the ingredients for that laborious task of building a margarita or mai tai. Margaritas especially. What a chore. I dread when I get the craving…Well, kind of. But while in the process I get this pavlovian wetness in anticipation of the happy warm glow that this drink brings. For me there best at my buddy John’s house. I taught him how to make the special Cadillac Margie about eleven years ago. He won’t remember that fact nor will he admit it but now he makes them better than I do. Or so I tell him. This is a case where truly it’s better to watch. Watch with a beer, cause that’s about how long it takes to make a Cadillac when he makes them.

So as far as being a cocktail goes does the beer count? Well technically no. It’s not a cocktail and comparatively, one for one, it’s not even close to the bender you get from a good margarita. And since, in this common bartending example, we are playing with serious liquor, I call a beer a pacifier, a filler, maybe even a primer. I will agree, beer does go with tequila. In fact if you’re doing shots, beer goes great with tequila. Habit in my college days, rarely practiced now. But the next day while grabbing the Advil and asking myself, “what did I drink last night?” I never include that first beer. It didn’t count. Or maybe it was it automatically included as part of the cocktail when I have a margarita. In either case it didn’t register on the alcoholic itinerary from the previous evening.

Beer, not in the cocktail family technically but by far the easiest drink to serve- the opposite of a Cadillac Margarita. Great idea - next time I make a Cadillac I’m using the beer hat. That way I can say I didn’t even see a beer.

Hat_for_beer_2
Hat_for_beer_2

Written by Eric States